The Story
Purchase includes CD booklet signed by Gavin Rossdale.
THE KINGDOM features some of the most potent songwriting of Rossdaleâs career, highlighted by the pummeling âFlowers on a Grave,â as well as the noise hurricane âQuicksandâ which finds him showcasing a vulnerability like rarely before. âIt encompasses my present inability to find a lasting significant other,â the singer openly admits of the trackâs inspiration. âI like the idea of until you find that perfect love that people are in quicksand in the attempt to find love. How love is implosive because people are so weird these days. Thatâs a very poignant song for me.â And then thereâs âUndone,â a heart-wrenching ballad written in a burst of inspiration that he describes as âvery pureâ and untainted. âIâm really proud of that song,â Rossdale says. âIt has none of the pressure of outside forces and white noise. I stayed true to it.â
In many ways, with Bushâs new album, Rossdale is creating the type of musicâand the worldâhe hopes to see. As he explains, The Kingdom is a utopic idealâa reaction to a world full of âjudgement and self-righteousness and mob mentality and where everyone knows better than everyone else.â âThe Kingdom was this place that I imagined where likeminded people could go and be free and artists and musicians and painters and people could think for themselves and donât hold any judgement over anyone else,â Rossdale offers.
Description
Purchase includes CD booklet signed by Gavin Rossdale.
THE KINGDOM features some of the most potent songwriting of Rossdaleâs career, highlighted by the pummeling âFlowers on a Grave,â as well as the noise hurricane âQuicksandâ which finds him showcasing a vulnerability like rarely before. âIt encompasses my present inability to find a lasting significant other,â the singer openly admits of the trackâs inspiration. âI like the idea of until you find that perfect love that people are in quicksand in the attempt to find love. How love is implosive because people are so weird these days. Thatâs a very poignant song for me.â And then thereâs âUndone,â a heart-wrenching ballad written in a burst of inspiration that he describes as âvery pureâ and untainted. âIâm really proud of that song,â Rossdale says. âIt has none of the pressure of outside forces and white noise. I stayed true to it.â
In many ways, with Bushâs new album, Rossdale is creating the type of musicâand the worldâhe hopes to see. As he explains, The Kingdom is a utopic idealâa reaction to a world full of âjudgement and self-righteousness and mob mentality and where everyone knows better than everyone else.â âThe Kingdom was this place that I imagined where likeminded people could go and be free and artists and musicians and painters and people could think for themselves and donât hold any judgement over anyone else,â Rossdale offers.












